Self Awareness and Advocacy

Advocates for Self
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VOISS Connection

VOISS lessons provided Rico with examples of self-advocacy skills. He learned that self-advocacy involves speaking up for yourself, asking for information to understand things that are important or interesting, and reaching out to others for help. 

Rico was consistently speaking up for himself during daily encounters when his needs were overlooked (e.g., the cafeteria worker forgot to give Rico dipping sauce and Rico politely requested it). However, Rico rarely asked for additional information and almost never recruited help from others. Ms. Rao created a lesson to help Rico practice the skill of advocating for himself (Self-Awareness & Advocacy Skill 16).

VOISS Advisor Lesson Plan Outline

Self-Awareness & Advocacy Skill 16: Advocates for Self

Define the social skill to be demonstrated in observable and measurable terms. This should be the skill you want the student to use when the situation / opportunity naturally occurs.

When Rico is stuck on a school assignment or interested in a lecture topic and wants additional information, he will raise his hand and ask for help or more information on 9/10 opportunities.

When Rico encounters a non-academic problem he cannot resolve independently (e.g., he needs to call his parents for a ride but does not have a cell phone), he will ask for help on 9/10 opportunities.

Generalization Emphasis

Response Generalization

Instructional Setting

Instructional Method

Generalization Tactic

Support Strategy

Generalizing the Skills

Ms. Rao thought it was important for Rico to have well-rounded self-advocacy skills, and she wanted to make sure he could ask for information and recruit help when necessary. Because this would involve Rico learning different responses, Ms. Rao was focusing on response generalization. She operationally defined two objectives:

  • When Rico is stuck on a school assignment or interested in a lecture topic and wants additional information, he will raise his hand and ask for help or more information on 9/10 opportunities.
  • When Rico encounters a non-academic problem he cannot resolve independently (e.g., he needs to call his parents for a ride but does not have a cell phone), he will ask for help on 9/10 opportunities.

Choosing an Instructional Setting and Method

Ms. Rao then considered the appropriate instructional setting. She recalled that Rico participated in a biweekly lunch bunch with peers with and without disabilities. Since both of the operationally-defined objectives involved interactions with peers and adults, she decided she would use role play within this small group setting to teach the operationally-defined objectives. She prepared scripts for four different scenarios focusing on the targeted skills.

Choosing a Generalization Tactic and Support Strategy

Although many of the self-awareness and advocacy skills were not naturally reinforcing, Ms. Rao thought that the targeted skills for this lesson had natural reinforcement contingencies. That is, asking for necessary / desired information or for help resulted in reinforcement. Rico would receive assistance or information when he demonstrated the operationally-defined skills. 

During VOISS training, Ms. Rao learned that embedded opportunities involved contriving motivating situations to promote generalization. Ms. Rao considered how some situations in which Rico would need to ask for help or information would be less motivating than others. For example, because Rico reported that science was his least favorite subject, he was unlikely to be motivated to inquire about the anatomy of a cell during biology class. Instead, Rico was more likely to ask for information during class on a preferred topic, like history. She decided she would contrive several situations after the role play to promote generalization. Finally, Ms. Rao would develop a hand signal to prompt Rico to ask for help or more information.

Lesson Implementation

Ms. Rao’s Lesson on “Advocating for Self”

 

Preparing the Role Play

Having identified the key elements for teaching Rico self-advocacy skills, Ms. Rao thought it might be useful to think through and script some of her instructional delivery. Role play requires specific roles for players, situations, and scripts for players to follow, much like a short play. She decided that two of the role plays would focus on teaching Rico to raise his hand and request information. In these scenarios, peers would play the roles of classmates, but would have limited speaking parts. The other two role plays would involve situations in which Rico had to ask a peer for help. 

Carrying Out the Small Group Instruction Lesson

Ms. Rao planned to have four students (including Rico) participate in the small group instruction. The lesson began with Ms. Rao explaining to the students what the role play entailed. She gave the students the scripts. At first, the students acted out the two scripts related to asking for more information, while Rico watched. One student played the teacher, and another student played Rico’s role. Ms. Rao explained when and why it was appropriate for Rico to raise his hand and request additional information. She also taught Rico her hand signal, a raised hand. She told him she would prompt him this way during class. After watching his peers rehearse a couple of times, Rico participated in the role play and practiced raising his hand and asking for additional information. 

Ms. Rao then repeated the activity with the final two scripts. Scripts for these scenarios focused on asking someone for help. After Rico watched his peers act out these scripts, Ms. Rao explained when and why it was appropriate to ask someone for help. Then he participated in the role plays.

Following the role play, Ms. Rao asked the students to identify other situations where they may desire additional information or require help. She prompted them to think about how these situations might occur throughout the school day and what they could say and do to acquire information or assistance.

Creating Embedded Opportunities

Following the lesson, Ms. Rao met with two of Rico’s teachers to contrive situations where Rico would want more information. For example, Rico’s history teacher was about to cover a unit on Ancient Egypt. Ms. Rao knew Rico was very interested in ancient civilizations and would be especially fascinated by Cleopatra and her history. Thus, she would ask his history teacher to create an embedded opportunity using this motivating topic. She asked the teacher to briefly introduce Cleopatra and pause for a few moments to allow Rico to ask for more information about Cleopatra’s interesting history.

National and State Standards Benchmarks and Indicators

SAA.16 Advocates for Self
Collaborative for academic, social and emotional learning (CASEL) Standards
  • Self Awareness
  • Self-Management
Kansas Social Emotional Character Development (KSECD) Standards

Character Development

  • Responsible Decision Making and Problem Solving
    • A. Develop, implement, and model responsible decision making skills. 2. Organize personal time and manage personal responsibilities effectively.
      • 6-8 (11-13) b. Recognize how, when, and who to ask for help and utilize the resources available.

Personal Development

  • Self-Awareness
    • B. Identify and assess personal qualities and external supports.
      • 6-8 (11-13) 8. Identify additional external supports (for example, friends, inspirational characters in literature, historical figures, and media representations).